I think chevy used 114lsa on their 375hp and 425hp rat motors plus the solid tappet. My personal rule of thumb is 60 degrees of overlap as a limit and less might be better.
My current cam has 48 degrees overlap and runs about the same or a bit better than the previous cam with 54 degrees overlap.
Overlap is your enemy on manifold motors. Some builders have found that anything hotter than the MP .528 solid cam is counterproductive on engines with factory exhaust manifolds. Interestingly, the factory big block solid lifter cams from Chevrolet had similar specs to the MP .528. So swap cams or get headers, headers obviously will make more power.
Andy F. made 550 hp with that cam with manifolds on his 470. Pretty small cam. Probably 0.500” net lift. Probably 230 -232 degrees duration at 0.050” when considering the 0.028” lash.
500 cu. In.
600 hp -ish
Manifolds
15” idle vacuum
Used a stock stall converter for years
3.23 gear
2 1/2” exhaust
15 years old
Drive it to work. Drove it to both Carlisle and Mopar Nats this year, with track time at both.
Probably not a 50,000 mile motor. With a couple changes, could be. But ask yourself this how: many miles do you really drive your car? You’ve had your car for 30 years. How many miles did you put on it? What does your next 30 years of driving look like?
All that said, based on your comments in this discussion, keep the cam, put headers on it, put it in the car, close the hood and forget about it. It won’t matter if I it makes 450 or 550 hp. You, nor anyone else will know.
If you want to stick with manifolds an explore a better cam, contact someone that has experience and does it for a living. Like PRH.